Close Menu
TechTost
  • AI
  • Apps
  • Crypto
  • Fintech
  • Hardware
  • Media & Entertainment
  • Security
  • Startups
  • Transportation
  • Venture
  • Recommended Essentials
What's Hot

Harness hits $5.5B valuation with $240M raise to automate AI’s ‘post-code’ divide

TIME named “Architects of AI” Person of the Year

WhatsApp’s biggest market becomes the toughest test

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
TechTost
Subscribe Now
  • AI

    TIME named “Architects of AI” Person of the Year

    15 December 2025

    Runway releases its first global model, adds native audio to latest video model

    14 December 2025

    OpenAI hits back at Google with GPT-5.2 after ‘code red’ memo.

    14 December 2025

    Trump’s AI executive order promises ‘a rulebook’ – startups may find legal loophole instead

    13 December 2025

    Ok, so what’s up with the LinkedIn algo?

    12 December 2025
  • Apps

    WhatsApp’s biggest market becomes the toughest test

    15 December 2025

    Google debuts ‘Disco’, a Gemini-powered tool for building web apps from browser tabs

    14 December 2025

    Google’s AI testing feature for clothes now only works with a selfie

    14 December 2025

    DoorDash driver faces felony charges after allegedly spraying customers’ food

    13 December 2025

    Google Translate now lets you listen to real-time translations on your headphones

    13 December 2025
  • Crypto

    New report examines how David Sachs may benefit from Trump administration role

    1 December 2025

    Why Benchmark Made a Rare Crypto Bet on Trading App Fomo, with $17M Series A

    6 November 2025

    Solana co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko is a big fan of agentic coding

    30 October 2025

    MoviePass opens Mogul fantasy league game to the public

    29 October 2025

    Only 5 days until Disrupt 2025 sets the startup world on fire

    22 October 2025
  • Fintech

    Coinbase starts onboarding users again in India, plans to do fiat on-ramp next year

    7 December 2025

    Walmart-backed PhonePe shuts down Pincode app in yet another step back in e-commerce

    5 December 2025

    Nexus stays out of AI, keeping half of its new $700M fund for India startup

    4 December 2025

    Fintech firm Marquis notifies dozens of US banks and credit unions of data breach after ransomware attack

    3 December 2025

    Revolut hits $75 billion valuation in new capital raise

    24 November 2025
  • Hardware

    Pebble founder unveils $75 AI smart ring to record short notes with the push of a button

    10 December 2025

    Amazon’s Ring launches controversial AI-powered facial recognition feature on video doorbells

    10 December 2025

    Google’s first AI glasses are expected next year

    9 December 2025

    eSIM adoption is on the rise thanks to travel and device compatibility

    6 December 2025

    AWS re:Invent was an all-in pitch for AI. Customers may not be ready.

    5 December 2025
  • Media & Entertainment

    Understanding the Dangerous Netflix-Warner Bros. Deal

    15 December 2025

    Disney signs deal with OpenAI to allow Sora to create AI videos with its characters

    11 December 2025

    YouTube TV will launch genre-based subscription plans in 2026

    11 December 2025

    Founder of AI startup Tavus says users talk to AI Santa ‘for hours’ a day

    10 December 2025

    Spotify releases music videos in the US and Canada for Premium subscribers

    9 December 2025
  • Security

    The flaw in the photo booth manufacturer’s website exposes customers’ photos

    13 December 2025

    Home Depot exposed access to internal systems for a year, researcher says

    13 December 2025

    Security flaws in the Freedom Chat app exposed users’ phone numbers and PINs

    11 December 2025

    Petco takes down Vetco website after exposing customers’ personal information

    10 December 2025

    Petco’s security bug affected customers’ SSNs, driver’s licenses and more

    9 December 2025
  • Startups

    Harness hits $5.5B valuation with $240M raise to automate AI’s ‘post-code’ divide

    15 December 2025

    Mesa shuts down credit card that rewards cardholders for paying their mortgages

    14 December 2025

    Port raises $100M valuation from $800M round to take on Spotify’s Backstage

    14 December 2025

    Eclipse Energy’s microbes can turn dormant oil wells into hydrogen factories

    13 December 2025

    Interest in Spoor’s AI bird tracking software is soaring

    13 December 2025
  • Transportation

    TechCrunch Mobility: Rivian’s survival plan involves more than cars

    14 December 2025

    India’s Spinny lines up $160m funding to acquire GoMechanic, sources say

    14 December 2025

    Inside Rivian’s big bet on self-driving with artificial intelligence

    13 December 2025

    Zevo wants to add robotaxis to its car-sharing fleet, starting with newcomer Tensor

    13 December 2025

    Driving aboard Rivian’s fight for autonomy

    12 December 2025
  • Venture

    Runware raises $50 million in Series A to make it easier for developers to create images and videos

    12 December 2025

    Stanford’s star reporter understands Silicon Valley’s startup culture

    12 December 2025

    The market has “changed” and founders now have the power, VCs say

    11 December 2025

    Tiger Global plans cautious business future with new $2.2 billion fund

    8 December 2025

    Sources: AI-powered synthetic research startup Aaru raises Series A at $1B ‘headline’ valuation

    6 December 2025
  • Recommended Essentials
TechTost
You are at:Home»Startups»Fast-growing South African business FARO raises $6 million to source, refurbish and sell surplus clothing
Startups

Fast-growing South African business FARO raises $6 million to source, refurbish and sell surplus clothing

techtost.comBy techtost.com19 January 202506 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Fast Growing South African Business Faro Raises $6 Million To Source,
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Global fashion brands they’re fighting billions of dollars” value of unsold inventory. Primarily, these brands avoid reselling in key markets such as the UK and the US to prevent market cannibalisation. Meanwhile, emerging markets such as Africa rely heavily on second-hand clothing imports, but 30% to 40% of these items are deemed unusable upon arrival, leading to environmental degradation due to discarded fabrics.

The situation highlights a paradox: A glut of new, unsold inventory in developed markets coexists with ecological damage caused by used imports in emerging markets. But this dynamic also creates unique arbitrage opportunities for startups in the global resale market — also known as resale — which is expected to reach around $350 billion by 2027.

Trying to take advantage of this opportunity is PHARAOHa South African upstart who emerged last year and recently raised $6 million to continue her vision of making fashion accessible by fighting textile waste across Africa.

Selling excess inventory to emerging markets

Here’s how it works: African markets can’t afford to support full-price retail stores for brands like Calvin Klein, Tommy Hilfiger and Zara. However, the desire for authentic products on the continent remains. FARO ensures that the excess stock of these brands gets a second life in South Africa, where they are in high demand, creating value for both markets and reducing waste.

Remarketing startup targets consumer returns with minor defects that brands often discard or incinerate due to high labor costs, co-founder and co-CEO David Thor he tells TechCrunch. FARO collects these items and restores them using its facilities equipped with industrial washers, steam tunnels and affordable labor. This approach prevents waste while enabling the start-up to buy stock at extremely low prices — sometimes as little as £1 apiece — and resell it through value-added processes.

Torr explains that the business operates on a fixed margin model that aims for 45% after all costs, including swing tags and processing. He also says that instead of inflating profits when margins exceed targets, FARO invests in better prices for its customers.

FARO currently has four stores, with ambitious plans to expand to 1,000 locations over the next decade across Africa, South America, Asia and the Middle East. His inventory includes approximately 40% repaired returns and 60% surplus items. FARO sources these garments through partnerships with major brands such as ASOS, Boohoo, G-Star, Jack & Jones and Levi’s, offering some at up to 70% off retail prices.

“Our core belief is if we can be the most compelling driver of great value for the customer, that’s how we build loyalty and stability, and how we get to 1,000 stores is to be 100% customer-centric,” Torr says. . .

South Africa’s retail market, unlike the rest of Africa, is highly developed, with more than 2,000 malls, making it a prime location for physical off-price retail distribution. This approach is necessary because off-price inventory—often returned by the consumer with unique pieces of a product—is too expensive to digitize and catalog online.

Even huge off-price retailers like TJX operate mostly offline, relying on established supplier relationships and legacy profit systems that leave little incentive for innovation. However, inefficiencies in these systems are becoming increasingly apparent, as inventory management is still based on outdated, labor-intensive processes, with planners manually handling mass events in Excel.

Torr says FARO is developing AI-powered agents designed to break down these complex buyer workflows into manageable micro-tasks, thereby streamlining operations.

“Some brands have over 15,000 people employed at the head office level just manipulating data in Excel,” he says. “If you look at what AI can do, you could build an AI agent for that, and that’s what we did. We started developing our first market models that could do this — not in hours, but in seconds. And his accuracy will be infinitely better than the man who would otherwise do it.’

According to Torr, the startup also plans to add personalized shopping tools. For example, customers interested in specific brands or items could be notified when similar products are about to arrive at one of its stores, improving the shopping experience.

It could prove to be a significant differentiator if it works. E-commerce continues to face obstacles in Africa due to logistical challenges and population density, making delivery models costly. While platforms like Takealot and Jumia have held their own for years, the rise of ultra-cheap, trendy platforms like Temu and Shein threaten not only their dominance but also that of fast-fashion brands operating in South Africa and catering to the continent’s price-sensitive consumers.

Street for a thousand shops

By eschewing e-commerce altogether to optimize its internal operations and partner supply chains and targeting aspirational buyers who value name-brand goods for their status and perceived quality, FARO is finding its niche, Torr says.

FARO launched in 2023 with an experimental pop-up store in South Africa, earning $100,000 in its first month. Initially, the company expected it would need seven stores to reach $2 million in annual revenue, based on traditional retail benchmarks.

By contrast, FARO, which operates in urban hubs, mid-market centers and formal retail spaces, says it reached that milestone — $2.3 million — with just four stores, achieving a 20-fold increase in revenue last year. Now, the remarketing startup aims to grow fivefold this year, according to Torr.

As for its plans to expand to 1,000 stores, these depend on how it effectively creates local price profiles tailored to regional demand and the specific brands available as it looks to expand into other emerging markets. Consumer behavior and preferences are not universal and can vary significantly between regions. A strategy that thrives in South Africa may not resonate in Kenya or Nigeria.

Torr started FARO with three other co-founders: Will McCarren, Chris Mahaniaand Amber Penney-Youngwho collectively gather experience from Amazon, Jumia, UCOOK, Superbalist, Spice & Roots and Zumi.

JP Zammitt, president of Bloomberg, led this investment. VC firms such as Presight Capital, Gharage Ventures and E4E Africa and individual investors such as Mato Perić (MPGI), Leonard Stiegeler (Pulse), Oliver Merkel (Flink), Vikram Chopra (Cars24), Tushar Ahluwalia (Razor Group), Sudeep Ramnani (Featuring 885 Capital) and Kresten Buch (88mph).

Africa African Bloomberg business clothing clothing resale FARO Fashion Fastgrowing million PHARAOH raises refurbish resale sell source South surplus used
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleRivian finalizes $6.6 billion loan for Georgia plant
Next Article Employees at failed startups are at particular risk of personal data theft via old Google logins
bhanuprakash.cg
techtost.com
  • Website

Related Posts

Harness hits $5.5B valuation with $240M raise to automate AI’s ‘post-code’ divide

15 December 2025

Mesa shuts down credit card that rewards cardholders for paying their mortgages

14 December 2025

Port raises $100M valuation from $800M round to take on Spotify’s Backstage

14 December 2025
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

Harness hits $5.5B valuation with $240M raise to automate AI’s ‘post-code’ divide

15 December 2025

TIME named “Architects of AI” Person of the Year

15 December 2025

WhatsApp’s biggest market becomes the toughest test

15 December 2025
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Fintech

Coinbase starts onboarding users again in India, plans to do fiat on-ramp next year

7 December 2025

Walmart-backed PhonePe shuts down Pincode app in yet another step back in e-commerce

5 December 2025

Nexus stays out of AI, keeping half of its new $700M fund for India startup

4 December 2025
Startups

Harness hits $5.5B valuation with $240M raise to automate AI’s ‘post-code’ divide

Mesa shuts down credit card that rewards cardholders for paying their mortgages

Port raises $100M valuation from $800M round to take on Spotify’s Backstage

© 2025 TechTost. All Rights Reserved
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.